For more than a century missionaries were the main contact
points between the Chinese and American peoples. Often frustrated
in saving Chinese souls, they nevertheless founded hospitals and
colleges, and meanwhile on the American scene they helped form the
image of China.
This volume offers views of missionary roles in the United
States and in China. Early American Protestant missions moved on
from the Near East to the Far East. The second great surge of
American missionary expansion in the 1880s was signaled by the
formation of more business-like mission boards, by the Student
Volunteer Movement to recruit liberal arts college graduates for
evangelism abroad, and by the Layman's Movement to back them up.
During the same period in China, missionary journalism was reaching
a new Chinese-Christian community, and missionary educational and
medical work was building modern institutions of social value for
Chinese communities. A few "Christian reformers" emerged in China's
treaty ports, and by the end of the century there was a missionary
contribution to the reform movement in general.
By the 1920s missionary and Chinese Christian educators were
collaborating in Christian colleges like Yenching University, only
to meet eventual disaster as the Nationalist revolution and Japan's
invasion precipitated the great Chinese Communist-led revolution of
the 1940s and after. American missions contributed fundamentally
both to the revolutionary changes in China and to the American
public response to them, although their impact on American policy s
less clear.
Fourteen contributors studying both sides of the missionary
effort, in China and in America, present case studies that suggest
conclusions and themes for research.
General
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